
June 1, 2026 - Full Show
6/1/2026 | 26m 50sVideo has Closed Captions
Watch the June 1, 2026, episode of "Chicago Tonight."
From the budget to the Bears, breaking down the legislative session in Springfield. And the latest in peace talks between the U.S. and Iran as the war continues.
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June 1, 2026 - Full Show
6/1/2026 | 26m 50sVideo has Closed Captions
From the budget to the Bears, breaking down the legislative session in Springfield. And the latest in peace talks between the U.S. and Iran as the war continues.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship>> Hello and thanks for joining us on Chicago tonight Brandis Friedman.
Here's what we're looking at.
And constituents come up to me.
Don't let the bears leave, but don't give them one red cent.
From the budget to the Bears recapping the weekend in Springfield.
>> I'm not happy about that is >> And where peace talks stand with Iran following ongoing strikes from both countries.
>> First off tonight, despite the fight over the minimum wage for tipped workers in the city of Chicago, those in suburban Cook County will receive a raise starting in just one month.
The Cook County Human Rights Commission is reminding employers that the minimum wage will increase to $15.40 an hour for non-tipped workers and up to $9.25 for tipped workers.
The county minimum wage is set to increase annually under a formula passed back in 2016.
The just the wage based on the greatest rate among either the federal or state wage or a county calculation using the consumer price index.
The rate does not apply to teen workers under the age of 18.
A Mexican independence festival returns to Grant Park this summer after canceling last year during the federal government's Immigration Enforcement campaign.
Organizers for Chicago say the festival will return September 12th and 13th.
What a stronger team and strength in strength and safety infrastructure.
The festival honors the historic tradition of Grito de Independencia.
The rallying cry that sparked Mexico's fight for freedom with live performances from local and international artists, authentic food from Chicago vendors and a Mexican American veto with local businesses and artists.
A full entertainment lineup will be announced in the coming weeks early.
Bird tickets are already on sale.
And Pride Month festivities kicked off today in Chicago and around the area.
The CTA unveiled its 2026 Pride train to celebrate.
It is the 9th year.
The train has been part of the system's red line.
The flagship events of the month are Chicago Pride Fest on Halsted Street from Addison to Grace.
That's on June.
20th and 21st and Chicago Pride Parade on Sunday, June 20th, one of the largest pride parades in the world.
Around up of the just-completed legislative session in Springfield right after this.
>> Chicago tonight is made possible in part why the Alexander and John Nichols family.
The Pope Brothers Foundation.
And the support of these donors.
>> The budget and the Bears were the talk of Springfield over the weekend this year, spring legislative session, which ended early this morning may be remembered for the bills that did not pass just as much as what did while lawmakers approved a 56 billion dollar budget.
The House and Senate could not agree on a bill that would pave the way for the Bears to build a new stadium in Illinois.
Joining us over zoom to recap the weekend in Springfield is been Zelensky statehouse reporter at Capitol News, Illinois.
Been welcome back.
So as we said, the General Assembly, of course, passing a budget last night.
How does the spending defer this year compared to last year's?
>> Not much, actually, by the time this current fiscal year is over the amount that the state is planning to spend in fiscal year.
2027 beginning on July.
1st, it's actually going to be pretty much the same amount that the state is going to spend this year.
So, you know, really just goes to highlight, I think how tight that budget was theirs.
Hardly really any new programs.
there's no, you know, additional spending on major policies that were already in the budget very, very, very tight budget year.
Basically a baseline budget coming year.
>> What new revenue sources are included in this budget.
>> Yeah, the main ones changes to operating loss deductions for businesses, but also the social usage tax that the city of Chicago has also put in place.
This would require the largest social media companies to pay a fee for each user that lives in the state of Illinois.
Then there's other things such as new licensing requirements and fees for fantasy sports operators basically tax seen prediction market sports.
But that's the same way that sports bets are currently tax.
Now, tires is another one additional advertising tax was also created.
But lawmakers are not going to collect money from it this year because they expect that's probably going to be tied up in court for quite a while.
>> What was the status, OK?
Because we've got to talk about the bare and groom, right?
What was the status of the Bear Stadium talks going into the weekend?
>> Yeah.
Going into the weekend it was still silence.
Essentially.
We have no idea what was actually going to happen.
There is no indication one way or another that bill was going to be filed.
It really was starting to get the impression.
I think that, you know, this was a having serious trouble getting support in the Senate.
So, you know, going into the weekend, I think we were, you know, that expecting maybe a last minute deal would come But, you know, I think chances that of that actually passing through both chambers of the General Assembly were pretty slim, you know, several days ago.
And certainly we saw the end result was that could get through one place.
But it was just too late.
there is no time in the House for it.
>> So walk us through I guess sort of like the back and forth over the weekend over this because thought there was a bill and that Bill was and now is new Bell.
What happed?
>> Yeah.
So we talked to Senator Cunningham, the Senate sponsor from the southwest side Chicago about this on Saturday night and he came out of a caucus meeting and told a group of reporters that the original pilot legislation, the mega project bill that Governor Pritzker had pushed for that the House and past that had no support in the Democratic caucus.
So they had to change gears.
They have to come up with something else and he said they were going to file a plan that would basically allow the city of Chicago to actually be able compete with Arlington Heights to attract the Bears and build a stadium and, you know, after that, it was kind of silent for most of the day on Sunday and then late Sunday night, Senator Cunningham told reporters that the he was going to file a bill and ultimately around 10:00PM.
He did file that Bill and it was very generous incentive package.
But it was just it was too late for the House to take it up.
Think didn't have time to review it after it passed the Senate at 03:30AM, in the morning today.
And, you I guess that's kind of where we're at right now.
You know, the Bears are in limbo.
>> Right.
So today, Mayor Brandon Johnson in Chicago, he did react to this continuing his push to keep the Bears in Chicago.
Here he is.
>> There is no play for all.
In tonight's, there is no clear indication of how what has been proposed.
That would did not pass.
How revenue would actually be generated.
What we have said from the very beginning, only viable plan for the Bears was proposed by my administration, along with the Bears 2 years ago.
>> Ben, what was it?
Was the mayor effective in peeling away support for Chicago?
We're from Chicago lawmakers for that original mega projects Bill.
>> It seemed like he was convincing.
There was a lot of Senate Democrats who won in Chicago to be able to have the opportunity to do something with Soldier Field, something with another site to house and incentives structured there, too, potentially keep the Bears in Chicago like the mayor has said, it turns out what we actually learn from Senator Cunningham is the Bears in the city of Chicago have actually been talking a lot more than we had thought they were.
So that seemed to be playing into the minds of a lot of Chicago law makers that they're actually was still a chance that the Bears can stay in Chicago.
But obviously this remains kind of a bit of a confusing situation because even this morning the Bears, but they are only choosing between Arlington Heights and Hammond, but it certainly have an effect.
I think the mayor's message that Chicago could still be in the running.
>> What else did the Bears say about these late developments?
>> Yeah, they didn't have much to say really at all.
They didn't take a position on the bill that was passed in the Senate this morning.
They didn't actually see that bill until the rest of us all the belts.
I think, you know, they didn't have time to evaluate it either.
But without action here in Springfield, they said that at this point they're going to move forward on the same timeline that Kevin Warren said a few months ago, which is that they're going to make a decision within the next late spring early summer, which is right where we're at and that decision is going to come down the Arlington Heights and Hammond based on the current information they have right now, which is Illinois does not have an incentive package, but Indiana does.
>> Is their chance than the Legislature could meet again to possibly push a stadium bill forward.
>> Yeah, it's a good question.
You know, House Speaker Emanuel, Chris Welch said this is going to be worked on during the summer.
We know this is a priority for a lot of lawmakers, but I asked earlier this morning.
You know, what is the chances of a special session?
Are you actually considering doing that?
The summer?
And he said no.
So it seems to me that this issue should least as far as the legislature goes is kind of it is off the table for right now.
It's lawmakers won't be back until November after the election.
That's probably too long for the Bears.
So I think a lot of folks just waiting to see what the bears do unless some something crazy changes in Springfield.
>> All right, Ben Zelensky, thanks for bearing with us.
Appreciate your.
Thanks for >> Up next, local reaction to the latest developments in the war with Iran.
Stay with us.
>> In the latest developments in the Middle East, President Donald Trump says Israel and Lebanon have agreed to dial back their fighting.
>> While over the weekend, the U.S.
and Iran traded fire testing in nominal cease-fire that has jeopardized peace talks.
It's not clear how close the 2 sides are to a deal.
Meanwhile, Ron's grip on the Strait of Hormuz continues to disrupt global energy supplies here to help us understand the back and forth are Ari on to bottom by vice-president of research for security and defense at the Chicago Council on Global Affairs to I previously worked at the State Department and the Department of Defense, Ibrahim, Abu Sharif, journalism and Middle Eastern studies professor at Northwestern University.
He's author of the book Social Media, Religious Authority and the Arab Gulf Crisis.
>> Richard Porter and attorney and longtime member of the Republican National Committee from Illinois.
He was White House adviser to President George HW Bush and Vice President Dan Quayle resume Robert Pape, political science professor at the University of Chicago, a terrorism specialist and founding director of the Chicago Project on Security and threats.
Welcome back to the 3 of you.
Welcome to you.
Thanks for joining us.
Are out about a violent start with you first, please.
Let's briefly sort of break down what we saw this past weekend when came to the back and forth strikes.
>> Yeah.
that the United States and Iran have been negotiating back and forth to achieve a sustainable cease-fire and also to settle and rent range of issues that have been for a long time for decades.
Actually kind of under penned the threats landscape and have been the source of tensions between the U.S.
and Iran.
That includes Iran's nuclear program, but also its support for terrorism across the region.
Negotiations seem to have stalled for now.
What I do want to caution is that, you know, there's always a lot been flow in any negotiations.
So we shouldn't read too much into the tea leaves and too much into true social posts and Twitter post from the Iranian side, I should say Expos because, you know, you do have and any kind of complex negotiations, especially with 2 countries that have such distressed as the United States and Iran due these things can be tricky complex issues and sometimes you make some progress and sometimes things come to a bit of a halt.
>> How does the how does this impact the U.S.
A strategy for negotiations?
What's been going on?
>> it seems like for now where a come back to a tip for tat response is across the region.
There have been missile and drone strikes and so back to tension.
So the tensions coming back between the 2 sides.
So, you know, I think right now the administration just kind of nice to take a step back and think about what its sure is going to be going forward and what is acceptable ultimately, right.
This is about what kind of deal is acceptable from the United States perspective.
From the president's perspective and what he's willing to live with the ice and the U.S.
is not get everything it wants.
Neither is Iran.
So it's a matter of figuring out what's on the table and what is acceptable.
>> Richard Porter about you, how do you sort of see what went on this weekend?
And you know where the U.S.
stands when it comes to negotiations.
So I think you have to recognize that when Donald Trump is negotiating, he's a little game theory and that's how he operates a so a lot of what he was doing.
I think over the course the weekend by going back was trying to establish dominance in could.
This is ultimately a surrender, its a negotiated surrender.
But you're going to do it on our terms.
He starred in a second to get all the terms he wants.
But I think he's trying to establish that kind of a dynamic and he did it by basically saying, well, we have be with the table, have a few more points.
want to go back back to you on that.
And so I the Iranians are usually the ones that are hard to bring to the table.
And so by playing coy, I think the president's trying to do the same thing Iranians are doing, but he's been emphasizing his patients let him work.
His is negotiation.
Magic in the meantime, we're choking them with a ongoing blockade.
And I think he's what he's trying to convey is I can wait you out.
You guys are drowning.
We're not.
We're short of.
We have a record high stock market.
You know, gas prices are high.
But beyond that, we can which you guys out and so if that's the message is trying to deliver.
>> Ibrahim, you going back to sort of like the start of this war.
Initially, the Trump administration justify the war as an effort to destroy the nuclear capabilities of Iran.
But prior to that, former intelligence director Tulsi Gabbard argued that the operation midnight Hammer from 2025 did that that it that it Iran would not be able to rebuild its nuclear program at the time sort of contradicting the president with the sort of conflicting reports.
Why do you think the U.S.
has started this work?
first of all, I don't think they're conflicting cause.
I think the intelligence reports were right.
>> And so I think conflicting what seems to be conflicting is the erratic nature of President Trump's mediation and his use of Twitter, Twitter under the social media is not that it's not the relevant to be very honest with you.
It is new way of doing diplomacy.
But you know, just like all social media they do tend to be erratic.
So the problem of trying to find the off-ramp, I don't think surrenders on table.
But if you're looking for the off-ramp and we can't find it, I think we have to look at what we could find the beginning.
That's the on ramp the United States made declarations that Iran is an imminent threat to the United States.
Intelligence agencies around the world said no, nobody won this war, not the Europeans, not the the people in the Gulf.
Nobody won this war, the Ronnie's and want this more.
And so what happened was lost.
I would say without whole lot of with them.
But I think there is an off-ramp available.
But that requires a steady hand.
if this is a being erratic is is a strategy for negotiations.
I have a hard time accepting that, but I do think there is an off ramp and at the end of it in Iranians are going to be much more powerful than they were before.
>> Robert Pape, this war has consistently polled as having some of the lowest approval ratings for any U.S.
conflict in history.
With such an unpopular war.
Do you think the president is like to the likely to find that off-ramp before the midterms?
>> I don't think it's going to find it very easily.
It's important understand that this war has been a colossal strategic disaster for the United States.
We started this war of the idea would be a weekend, essentially maybe a few weeks.
Here is.
We were going to topple the regime.
Well, that just simply didn't happen.
And we did.
The bombs hit targets.
Military did a splendid job what happened here is that as we went our strategic position, not worth are on now is control of the Strait of Hormuz.
Those that's 15% plus the world.
Evergy's supplies.
That is an enormous game for Iran and they're in the driver's seat.
And you saw today you saw what Israel vary as to whether Iran called negotiations and within an hour, President Trump was on the phone Netanyahu to get him to pull back.
Now, how many people in the world can get President Trump to do something in one hour and he's had multiple tweets.
Turn to say 2 are in.
This is directly directed toward Iran.
Understand I'm Israel back.
Well, this shows you that Iran is in the driver's Trump isn't what's called a classic escalation trap.
Where you get one strategically behind position worse?
Now choice is are essentially capitulated to the stronger power, which of course he doesn't want to do or didn't ask away.
And he's bouncing back and forth between want to get has been for weeks now.
Richard Porter's reaction to that.
What are you?
What do you think or what are options here?
>> Why that's not to say that Iran is the stronger power that's just not.
>> I mean, the reality is that we could take that straight anytime.
We wanted to put the president showing a real regard for human life.
He's been fighting an entire were without losing any casualties.
I mean, essentially that's what he's been able to do.
And he's he's trying to get this thing done with the economic hammer without putting troops the ground is necessary to clear out the straits now.
But the reality is they're are vulnerable targets on both Kharg Island is just as vulnerable as the Saudi facility, which is enormous on the other side of the of the Gulf.
And I think our allies in the region have been saying to us, look, lets you get this thing done without further for, you damage being done to these very important facilities.
But the idea goodbye to let's see just over that this was a huge role to law justice.
>> He's been focusing if I'm for president.
want to come back return.
A simple question.
yes, we are So why did President Trump called Netanyahu this morning that he just was he going to do it anyway or is this direct response to Iran's behavior?
>> Yeah, well, why was Netanyahu choosing this moment to go into penned into to I mean, so, look, there's a whole lot of gamesmanship.
he's installing may, and he's not dealing fact that it's all obvious that you're overstating the case for an Iranian power that do not on the United States common to get.
going him in here.
Go I think we're we're getting lost in weeds here and no one said Iran is more powerful.
The United States, everybody knows United States have the big I know you're not saying that.
Norm Eisen were saying in comparatively before the war, Iran is much stronger now.
No one saying it's a superpower.
Nolan saying that it is upset the balance superpowers and in the world.
Nobody saying that.
And so I think that if you if you want to make a point, let's stick to fact Robert and sit say that the loss of our property nice I didn't say Nobody's thing that nobody in their right mind would say that.
So let's let's establish the facts about what we said rather than you you know, almost to the point of who's more powerful.
I'm not going to that question.
But are you on how much damage can be us really do Iran's nuclear capabilities at the time that she will bowl.
>> I think I land somewhere in the middle of all all of conversations where, you know, I do think that militarily we have actually made quite a bit of dense in terms of rolling back Iranian capabilities.
That's true on Iran's nuclear program must run Iran's missile and drone programs able program naval capability.
Certainly I think the bigger question is what does that mean strategically, right?
At the end of the day, you can roll back tactically a lot of Iranian capabilities.
But what does Iran retains so to come back to the nuclear program, as you mentioned?
You know, I think we've actually boost between midnight hammer the operation last summer and between those conflicts.
We have rolled back a lot of Iran's nuclear capabilities.
Key facilities have been damaged.
What I think is important here, though, is that Iran does continue to maintain highly enriched uranium, but it has its disposal enough to make several nuclear weapons if it chooses to do so if it chooses to do so is the operative piece here.
So we need to know if Iran is going to make the decision after this conflict or during conflict to acquire a nuclear weapon.
We don't know that we don't have the answer to that question yet.
The second piece of that is that there is still a knowledge base that exist within a run to be able to reconstitute its nuclear program.
taken technical experts, scientists and as the director general of the National Atomic Energy Agency keeps saying unless you're willing to kill every single person there, they are going to maintain that knowledge base to be able to reconstitute their program.
It's going to take time.
It's not going to happen overnight, but they can do for him.
There's a point you disagree.
first of all, I don't think your mom has enough for preached at percentage.
A six-person Richmond is not enough to make a weapon.
>> It has here on 90%.
However, we've been living with the science fiction time continue on fallacy.
And as for last 30 years, Iran has been 2 weeks away from the bomb.
So I think we need to stop dipping into that retention pond of talking points.
It's not it's not the main issue here.
The main issue President Trump, thought that Iran is going to be Venezuela.
Venezuela.
System where you we take out the leadership and then we got oil.
They seriously this calculator on anyone who is familiar with the region could have said it's impossible for you to repeat and the Caribbean what you want to do this to do same thing Iran, impossible.
Anyone who has a modicum understanding.
But however, there's a certain arrogance in a certain brash about the president and he's a sorry his body.
And that has has something on him because he's listen to is really it the Israeli point.
I'm not saying because I don't know.
But if you look at the action, president's not holding control it's very it's very Robert Pape, just a couple of seconds left.
What is an off-ramp look like here?
>> It has no off-ramp.
There's no path that we would have taken about 6 or 7 weeks.
We're going to run out of the while.
Inventories in the world is all the oil.
Most of the oil ours.
>> Are now telling almost every single day.
So this idea of just wait it out.
See what President Trump does.
Well, the problem we're running out of oil inventories and that's happening every single day that he can't find off-ramp.
And I'm saying that you know how get reported.
It's off ramp.
Look like seconds deal thing to be doing.
A lot of the shorter, I think by the end of the month mean Trump on Sunday, Yeah.
I think one of his ripped up by the 4th of July.
Obviously, I think that's his game.
>> Okay.
I'm gonna leave it there.
Hopefully will be back sooner to talk about this Thanks to Thanks to all of you for joining rant by Ibrahim, a Bush, Robert Pape, Richard Porter, thanks, everyone.
And that's our show for this Monday night.
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We'll talk one-on-one with Illinois House Speaker Emanuel Chris Welch about what he sees as the spring legislative sessions wins and losses.
>> Now for all of us here in Chicago Brandis Friedman, thanks for watching.
Stay healthy and safe and have a good thing.
>> Wu's was made possible by Robert a cliff and Clifford a Congo, personal injury and wrongful death.
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